I wondered if anyone could give me a little general advice.
We are about to buy our first house. Its a semi and was built about 1950.
It had a gable end, concrete tile roof.
Surveyor said there doesnt seem to be any issues in its structure or with the tiles.
All the other houses around are the same, with the same origional tiles.
My question is, although they seem ok now, and so do everyone elses, there 60 years old. How long could you expect them to last?
Hard question to answer i know, but generaly, are we all pushing our luck and they should already have failed, or is it normaly possible for them to last maybe another 15 years or so.
There must be some kind of expected life span?
Also, it has a ground floor bay window with a flat concrete roof. It seems weather tight but surveyor says it will be a cold surface and may be prone to condensation. What can be done here? The ceilings are low, and im tall, so i wondered if there are internal and/or external insulation options.
There is another flat roof upstairs too. Its like a mini dorma, about 10" above the gutter so there is a 10" by maybe 48" flat roof. Not sure how the tiles join to it.
In this room the ceiling has a 45 degree slope along the window wall (does that make sense?)
I was wondering how this could be insulated too.
Thanks.
We are about to buy our first house. Its a semi and was built about 1950.
It had a gable end, concrete tile roof.
Surveyor said there doesnt seem to be any issues in its structure or with the tiles.
All the other houses around are the same, with the same origional tiles.
My question is, although they seem ok now, and so do everyone elses, there 60 years old. How long could you expect them to last?
Hard question to answer i know, but generaly, are we all pushing our luck and they should already have failed, or is it normaly possible for them to last maybe another 15 years or so.
There must be some kind of expected life span?
Also, it has a ground floor bay window with a flat concrete roof. It seems weather tight but surveyor says it will be a cold surface and may be prone to condensation. What can be done here? The ceilings are low, and im tall, so i wondered if there are internal and/or external insulation options.
There is another flat roof upstairs too. Its like a mini dorma, about 10" above the gutter so there is a 10" by maybe 48" flat roof. Not sure how the tiles join to it.
In this room the ceiling has a 45 degree slope along the window wall (does that make sense?)
I was wondering how this could be insulated too.
Thanks.